Although best known in the Netherlands, Livin’ Blues also gained a following elsewhere in Europe, especially in Poland. At the start of the 80s, the band included Oberg, Christiansen, Evert Willemstein (bass) and Boris Wassenbergh (drums). Spin-off bands formed by ex-members of the Livin’ Blues included Nitehawk and the J&T Band, while most members also played with other Dutch blues and rock bands. The band recorded from 1968, cutting a few singles with its first album coming in 1969. The band appears to have drifted from the limelight after the early 80s but interest in its recorded work remained high into the new millennium.
AllMusic
Tracks
1. Waitin' on You (B.B. King, Ferdinand Washington) - 2:47
2. One Night Blues (Nicko Christiansen, Ted Oberg) - 6:40
The original version of Moxy was actually one of a number of groups Buzz Shearman had been in. After the breakup of Sherman & Peabody (named after the cartoon ‘Mr Peabody’s Improbable History’), which also featured Greg Godovitz (Fludd & Goddo) and Gil Moore (Triumph) – he bounced around a few other Ontario groups which included Flapping. But when the nucleus of that group left Hamilton to become Ian Thomas‘ band Tranquility Base, Shearman returned to Toronto and joined the already-established Leigh-Ashford.
Following that bands’ demise in ’73, he hooked up with guitarist Earl Johnson and drummer Bill Wade, who he’d played with before in Leigh-Ashford. They added Kim Frased on bass and began playing together in the spring of ’74, still calling themselves Leigh-Ashford and carrying on the tradition of the ‘original’ band of putting on one of rock’s better live shows without all the ‘fluff’. After problems left them bassist-less, Johnson recommended Terry Juric, who he and Wade had played with in Outlaw Music. A name change later and they released “Can’t You See I’m A Star” as a single for Yorkville Records in ’74.
They landed a deal with Polydor the next year and flew to New York to record their first album with producer Mark Smith. While in The Big Apple, the rock-Gods were smiling. Legendary guitarist Tommy Bolin (James Gang, Deep Purple) happened to be in the studios and ended up working with them on the record.
The eponymous debut was released that summer, with “Fantasy” as the first single. When they returned to Toronto they recruited Buddy Caine as a second guitarist and in no time at all they’d become regulars on the Ontario bar circuit, quickly gaining a reputation as a no-nonsense, to-the-bones rock band. MOXY II came out a year later and spawned the hit single “Take It Or Leave It”. Their simple and blunt approach to music earned them several ‘hot tour pockets’, including Texas – where they travelled with Triumph – another Dixie-land fave.
Tragedy struck in 1983 when Shearman died in a motorcycle accident.
by Danny Bilan
Tracks
1. Cause There's Another (Buddy Caine, Buzz Shearman) - 3:45
2. Take It Or Leave It (Buddy Caine, Buzz Shearman) - 3:43
3. Through The Storm (Earl Johnson) - 4:00
4. One More Heartbreak (Earl Johnson) - 2:38
5. Slippin' Out (Bill Wade, Earl Johnson, Terry Juric) - 4:02
6. Midnight Flight (Earl Johnson) - 3:30
7. Change In My Life (Buddy Caine, Buzz Shearman) - 4:38
8. Tryin' Just For You (Buddy Caine, Buzz Shearman) - 4:30
Not to confused with the San Francisco's native band, these guys came out of the Windy City. Before they regrouped to record their timeless classic "Revival" album in 1982 they were stunning audiences during their late 70s prime opening shows for acts like Budgie, Black Oak Arkansas, Steppenwolf and others. We struck gold when we unearthed this wonderful 1978 recording of Winterhawk at their peak during a headlining gig at Chicago's infamous Aragon Ballroom! You'll hear guitarist Jordan Macarus at the top of his game, dealing out endless mounds of mindblowing fretwork! Previously unreleased Winterhawk classics like 'Off the Bat,' 'There and Back Again,' 'Creatures of the Sea,' 'In the Wake of Things Yet to Come' plus live versions of 'Free to Live,' 'Sanctuary' and more.
"For those of you un-enlightened to the guitar talents of Jordan Macarus, this live CD will be a revelation for you. The guitar work is stunning, the songs are perfect and bring to mind the twin lead stylings of Wishbone Ash and even in parts reminds of a what a 70's version Iron Maiden might have been" -
Shroom Records
Tracks
1. Sanctuary (Jordan Macarus, Doug Brown) - 5:27
2. In The Wake Of Things Yet To Come (Jordan Macarus) - 8:40
3. Hammer And The Axe (Jordan Macarus) - 6:41
4. Creatures Of The Sea (Jordan Macarus) - 13:08
5. Off The Bat (Jordan Macarus) - 8:18
6. Interlude (Jordan Macarus, Steve Tsokatos) - 1:15
7. There And Back Again (Jordan Macarus) - 9:23
8. Drum Solo (Steve Tsokatos) - 1:25
9. Free To Live (Jordan Macarus) - 10:10
10.Bad Influence (Jordan Macarus) - 4:35
11.Too Much Of Nothin' (Steve Tsokatos, Doug Brown) - 4:08
Remastered edition of this 1972 release. Windfall assembled this outstanding live document of the original version of the band Mountain following their breakup. The album features a couple of tracks from their landmark performance at the Woodstock festival and the epic centerpiece of the album, a majestic extended version of 'Nantucket Sleighride'. Leslie West, Felix Pappalardi, Corky Laing and Steve Knight were riding their first wave of success with their first two studio albums when these performances were documented.
This version of the band could flat-out cook and the extended cuts show that they knew how to jam with a sense of power and dynamics. The performances were mastered from the original tapes by Vic Anesini and the liner notes by Ralph Chapman place the whole project in the proper perspective. The album is fleshed out by an extended bonus performance of "Stormy Monday" that was culled from another early '70s festival performance.
Tracks
1. Long Red (Felix Pappalardi, John Ventura, Leslie West, Norman Landsberg) - 5:44
Jeffrey Arthur, Neil Gottlieb, and Michael Hurley discovered a common interest in music while they were attending the University of South Florida in the early 1970s. The trio somehow attracted the attention of Clive Davis who signed them to Columbia. Co-produced by Clay Pitts and David Spinozza and recorded in New York with an all star cast of sessions players, the group made their debut with 1973’s cleverly-titled “Arthur Hurley & Gottlieb”. Arthur was responsible for all of the material which was heavily geared to sensitive singer-songwriter and country-flavored moves.
Their first single release was: ”Sunshine Ship”, an Arthur penned classic from the self titled LP. The group recorded 2 albums for Columbia before moving to A&M Records in 1975. No hits followed the “Sunshine Ship release”, and the group broke up pursuing solo ventures. Jeff Arthur went on to become an Addy winning jingle writer and producer for some of the largest advertising clients in the country.
Tracks
1. Sunshine Ship - 2:35
2. Time Carousel - 3:29
3. Cruisin' - 2:33
4. She's Got Feelings Too - 2:25
5. Fulton County Fair (Christopher Horrell, Jeffrey Arthur, Michael Hurley, Neil Gottlieb) - 2:14
Aquila were a five-piece progressive rock band from Wales who, in their time together during that wonderfully creative and burgeoning prog scene of the day, sadly left us with only one 1970-issued, self-titled release on RCA. The band were the brainchild of Blonde On Blonde guitarist, Ralph Denyer, who wrote and composed all the music and songs on the album.
Flute, sax, and the venerable Hammond augment the classic bass-drums-guitar bedrock, affording a jazz-inflected sound not too dissimilar to the output of the Neon, Dawn, and Transatlantic labels at that time—think Raw Material, Diabolus, Tonton Macoute, or Hannibal..Why Aquila broke up after just one album is a mystery. It sounds very competent against some of the other albums of the time, not least for the careful production work of Patrick Campbell-Lyons from Nirvana UK fame.
Prairie Madness is Chris Ducey on the guitar and singing lead and Ed Mills on the piano with a voice that adds to the sharp quality and flow of the duo's harmonics.
Prairie Madness (Columbia) carries a positive message in their sounds and lyrics. Like a westerly, they are a steady and warming change. They bringing a fresh western wind of folk-gospel sounds with an exciting mixture of original compositions. The album was produced by Matthew Fisher, former Procol Harum organist, who also plays keyboards on some tracks, backing by a full band with session musicians such as Jack Conrad on bass, Jim Young and Richie Hayward on drums, plus Airto Moreira and Emil Richards on Percussion.
Opening with "Nothing for Sophia," a somewhat haunting piece, they then showed what they are all about with "Shame the Children" and "Girl from Cincinnati." Ducey has a voice that moves in and along with the mate- rial in rich and ranging gospel tones which add to the performance. One does find him somewhat subdued on the guitar. Mills comes through nicely on the keyboard, especially so when blending vocally with Ducey.
Other songs are "Choo Choo Nairobi," an interesting figuration of sound and beat, "Broke Down," a rich blues-gospel piece, and "I'm Ready".
Tracks
1. Nothing For Sophia (Chris Ducey, Edward Millis) - 4:29
2. Up You Go (Chris Ducey, Edward Millis) - 3:23
3. Girl From Cincinnati (Kendrew Lascelles, Chris Ducey, Edward Millis) - 4:19
4. Choo Choo Nairobi (Chris Ducey, Edward Millis) - 3:31
The story of Mike Furber is one of a star that shone brightly but briefly, and a tale which ultimately had a tragic ending for the shy, sensitive and naive young man who was chewed up and spat out by the frantic sixties Aussie pop music scene.
Mike was born in London in 1948 and emigrated with his family to Brisbane at an early age. In mid-1965, at around age 16, he chanced to meet Paul Wade and Neville Peard on a suburban train journey, and got to discussing music and the fact that he was keen on singing. A friendship and alliance soon grew among the lads. Wade and Peard had already formed a garage band with Greg Walker and Robbie Van Delft that evolved into the Bowery Boys, and upon meeting Mike they invited him join as lead singer.
It must be stressed that in the beginning the band was definitely a single entity, The Bowery Boys, not "Mike Furber and ...". It was only after flamboyant impresario Ivan Dayman spotted Furber and offered the young outfit recording and performing opportunities with his burgeoning Sunshine empire, that attention became more firmly focussed on the lead singer. Dayman's intention was to establish Mike Furber as a pop idol in his own right along the lines of Normie Rowe, with whom Dayman had already achieved enormous national success.
Writer, collector and pop historian Dean Mittelhauser (on whose article in Australian Record Collector much of this profile is drawn) doesn't have much good to say about Ivan Dayman's involvement with Furber ("boy, could I tell you a few stories about him!") and hints that Dayman was planning to to edge the band out of the spotlight and groom Mike for solo stardom more or less from the outset and intending -- hence, the billing as Mike Furber & the Bowery Boys.
Mike had a limited vocal range but used his voice to maximum effect. Its deep timbre belied the cute and appealing "little boy lost" look portrayed in his promo photos. Here, certainly, was Dayman's future Rowe-style superstar in the making and, to paraphrase the old paradigm, "the little girls understood". Furber and band for a short time stormed national stages to a general response of screaming hysteria.
Beginning with the gritty and confident-sounding group-composed "Just A Poor Boy", the band achieved moderate chart success but attracted intent industry scrutiny. They followed up with a commanding cover of Graham Gouldman & the The Mockingbirds' "You Stole My Love" it sounds like the backing vocals on this one were provided by Sunshine labelmates Marcie Jones & the Cookies, though this assumption needs to be verified. A smart and tight single, nevertheless. Interestingly enough, this 45 was released concurrently on the Sunshine and Kommotion labels, territorially, although both issues had similar catalogue numbers and were, after all, pressed and distributed by parent company Festival.
The third Mike Furber single, his last with Bowery Boys backing, was a tough, punkish stormer called "That's When The Happiness Began". Mittelhauser cites it as every bit as good as companion versions from Grains Of Sand (US) and The Montanas (UK). Its oft-overlooked flip, "You", is a cool punk ballad, if you can imagine such a thing.
It was at this point (around August '66) that Furber and the Bowery Boys parted ways. Dean Mittelhauser to explain the unfortunate rift:
"A lot of the blame can be rested firmly at Mr Ivan Dayman's feet. He was already middle-aged and knew nothing about rock & roll. He continually pushed Furber while leaving the Bowery Boys out of television appearances and interstate tours. It's strange now to imagine, but we all think that Furber was a solo star and The Bowery Boys were a bunch of patsies who were just paid to back him. This of course is false, but it was exactly what Dayman wanted everybody to think. Well, he succeeded even though the guys from The Bowery Boys still thought of themselves as part of the whole box and dice and not just Mike Furber's backing band."
Although Mike released three solo singles during 1967, he seemed to have retreated into obscurity. Despite the patronage of Bee Gees supremo Barry Gibb ("Where Are You?", "Second Hand People"), all three discs stiffed on the charts. Another single, covering Skip James' "I'm So Glad" (done in similar style around this time by Cream) failed as well, and things weren't helped by further lacklustre outings like "If You Need Me". Musical backing for this brace of tracks was provided by Brisbane outfit The Escorts, who also backed singer and future Uptight! host Ross D. Wylie in his early career.
In October '67, Go-Set magazine plugged Furber's next single, "Bring Your Love Back Home" with the banner headline "Mike Furber Back On The Scene", and reported:
"There is no doubt that this is the best disc he has ever had. It could be the break he has been waiting for to put him right back on top."
Despite this valuable coverage, and extraordinarily extensive promotion -- not to mention the magnificence of the single itself -- it sank without a trace. This disappointment was possibly one prompter for the first of a series of nervous breakdowns that poor Mike was to suffer. There is still much to be discovered about the fortunes of the Sunshine organisation, but it is probable that Mike's career slump was brought about by the collapse of Sunshine in 1967. It is known that Sunshine's house producer Pat Aulton suffered serious consequences, since Pat had reportedly been made a director of the company without his knowledge, and as a result he had his car and furniture repossessed.
And indeed, Mike disappeared from public view for 18 months or so, only to emerge in 1969 with a fresh EMI Columbia deal. But was this to mean a form of settlement for Furber? Another mediocre chart performance with his EMI single debut, "There's No Love Left" was less than encouraging, but a further disappointment occurred with the follow-up single.
Specially composed for Mike by Harry Vanda and George Young (anticipating their hugely successful "Evie" in 1973) the innovative "I'm On Fire" / "Watch Me Burn" was an ambitious two-part suite spread across both sides of the 45. However it failed to ignite the imagination of punters and programmers alike and was apparently withdrawn soon after release.
Furthering his involvement with Albert Productions, in May 1970 Mike recorded two tracks for the company, "Helen Jane" and "Love Song" (the former written by Ted Mulry) but these were never released.
In June 1970 Furber undertook a national tour with The Sect and Doug Parkinson In Focus, as support acts to visiting Motown legends The Four Tops. Without much to really prompt him, Go-Set reporter Stephen MacLean bagged Mike's performance:
"Mike Furber should also be placed in the 'embarrassing' category. 'What happened?' he asked. 'The last time I played Festival Hall it was packed'. Mike was referring to the reasonably small audience. This was amusing in light of the fact that Mike's admirers wouldn't fill an out-house. He summed up his sincerity when he stripped down to a lace see-through shirt to sing 'I'm A Man' like that. Groovy, Mike".
From then on, the story of Furber's progress is a little clouded. We know that in the early seventies he did his stint of national service and this experience was apparently very traumatic for Mike. Yet after that, he returned to performing, and won good notices in the stage production of Godspell.
In 1973 Mike won a role in the rock musical Nuclear (written by Brian and Carole King from The Executives) but he was sacked from the production soon afterwards. It has been claimed that this plunged Mike into into a deep depression but his friend, bassist Bob Daisley, says that although Mike was disppointed by losing the role, he continued working, and that there was no indication that he planned to take his own life.
MIke died in mysterious cirucmstances on the 10 May 1973, aged only 25. It is alleged that he hanged himself in the garage of his Sydney house, but there have been persistent claims that Mike was murdered as a result of underworld entaglements. Dean Mittelhauser detailed some of these conspiracy theories. A recent Melbourne newspaper article commemorating Mike's 60th birthday reported that his family and friends (such as musician Bob Daisley) still believe that Mike was murdered, and refute claims that he killed himself.
by Paul Culnane
Tracks
1. Just A Poor Boy (Paul Wade, Robert Van Delft, Neville Peard) - 2:26
2. You Stole My Love (Graham Gouldman) - 2:41
3. You (Mitchell Bottler, Harvey Price) - 1:58
4. Where Are You (Barry Gibb) - 2:03
5. Mailman Bring Me No More Blues (Ruth Roberts, Bill Katz, Stanley Clayton) - 2:56
6. It's Gonna Work Out Fine (Rose Marie McCoy, Joe Seneca) - 2:21
7. That's When Happiness Began (Dick Addrissi, Don Addrissi) - 2:16
8. Second Hand People (Barry Gibb) - 2:27
9. I'm So Glad (Skip James) - 3:10
10.It's Too Late (Bobby Goldsboro) - 2:31
11.Bring Your Love Back Home (Brian Henderson, Liza Strike) - 2:29
12.If You Need Me (Robert Bateman, Wilson Pickett, Sonny Sanders) - 2:24
13.You're Back Again (Lonnie Lee) - 2:18
14.Love Talk (Peter Best) - 1:26
15.Take This Hammer (Muff Winwood, Steve Winwood, Peter York, Spencer Davis) - 2:14
The Weeds were Fred Cole's (later founder and frontman of the legendary Dead Moon) second band but the suits being suits forced the band to moonlight under the cutesy Lollipop Shoppe tag to lure in sweet-toothed teens. Thankfully, the sound doesn't change from name to name; this is tough, acid-laced garage rock from the cradle of the sound, the Pacific Northwest. The Weeds gained notice in garage rock circles, and their only single, "It's Your Time" b/w "Little Girl," has become a collectors' favorite. It is a snarling, raw example of '60s punk, and the a-side appeared on one of the Nuggets anthologies.
This is the first official reissue of The Weeds (a.k.a. The Lollipop Shoppe), authorized by Fred Cole. Life for a young band on the road & on the way up is a merry chaos. When "You Must Be a Witch" proved to be a hit single, The Weeds were hot. The group regularly opened for The Doors, The Seeds, and Moby Grape as well as a few one-offs with the likes of Buffalo Springfield, Janis Joplin, and Jefferson Airplane. This is `60s garage/psychedelia as its best. A long-awaited re-issue, the album has been beautifully re-mastered by Mark "Bosshoss" Taylor.
Tracks
1. It's Your Time (Dennis Wynne, Eddie Bowen) - 2:22
2. Little Girl (Van Morisson) - 3:00
3. You Must Be A Witch (Fred Cole) - 2:46
4. Underground Railroad (Fred Cole, Ron Buzzel) - 7:43
5. Baby Don't Go (Bob Atkins, Fred Cole) - 2:42
6. Who'll Read The Will (Bob Atkins, Fred Cole) - 2:30
7. It's Only A Reflection (Eddie Bowen) - 3:08
8. Don't Look Back (Fred Cole) - 2:33
9. Don't Close The Door On Me (Fred Cole, Ron Buzzel) - 4:25
10.It Ain't How Long (Eddie Bowen, Fred Cole) - 2:44
11.It's Makin' It (Eddie Bowen, Fred Cole) - 2:30
12.I'm Gonna Be There (Bob Atkins, Fred Cole) - 2:41
13.You Don't Give Me No More (Bob Atkins, Fred Cole) - 2:17
14.Sin (Fred Cole) - 2:25
15.Mr. Madison Avenue (Bob Atkins, Fred Cole) - 2:35
So steadfast was their faith in Jesse Colin Young, Warner Brothers ended up giving the frontman and his Youngblood cohorts the keys to a subsidiary label as the 1960s faded out. Raccoon Records would be best known for releasing Michael Hurley’s second and third LPs—a significant measure that can distort the label’s legacy when having to compare the remainder of the catalog to those now-legendary slabs. At the time, however, Snock fit in just fine with the unknowns that made up Raccoon’s non-Youngblood roster: a coterie of friends, acquaintances, and partners of the band running the show. Better yet, the label offered an opportunity for the non-Jesse members of the band an opportunity to bring their ideas to life. At the tail end of the label’s run guitar-, keys-, and anything else he would pick up-man Lowell Levinger gave it a go, leaving us with the overlooked and splendid Mid-Mountain Ranch.
We’re offered a greasy affair overall. The tunes are rollicking, delightfully out of key at times, and general front porch pickin’ fare. Appropriately, the record begins with Chuck Berry’s “Back in the USA” and about half of the tunes on the record come from the same vein of classic Americana. Bill Monroe’s “Sittin’ Alone in the Moonlight” (also covered by Raccoon labelmates High Country) makes an appearance. “Ocean of Diamonds” by Cliff Carnahan offers Levinger a chance to show off some pedal steel chops and Hank Williams makes an appearance with the group giving “Honky Tonk Blues” an off-kilter swing. The selections and the general atmosphere of camaraderie is cut from the same cloth as The Band’s early output (though with far less emphasis on the tightness of arrangements and harmonies).
Every so often, however, the fellas get cleaned up and down to business. “Vanderbilt’s Lament” is exactly the sort of paganistic midsummer romp needed to liven up an otherwise comfortable affair. Images of the ensemble set against a massive pyre in the middle of a swamp are conjured up as the rabid hootenanny devolves into the far-more-gentle, though equally haunting “Interlude.” The perfect circular instrumental with its flawless dosage of creepiness is as much indebted to John Fahey as Dr. John. “Familiar Patterns” is credited to bassist Michael Kane, and packs a wallop of heartache into the wide open sparse arrangement. The pedal steel returns and lets the tune drift endlessly through one’s ears all day. Before shutting down the show, Banana delivers the fantastic “Lucas Valley Breakdown”, a Flatt and Scruggs style number on which Levinger plays all instruments involved. The record closes with “The Rights of Man”—and Banana’s finest vocal delivery on the LP. Accompanied only by guitar, Levinger adheres to the whole brevity thing, making his point and shutting things down beautifully.
by James Rooney
Tracks
1. Back In The U.S.A (Chuck Berry) - 2:54
2. My True Life Blues (Lowell Levinger) - 3:48
3. Vanderbilt's Lament (Joe Bauer, Richard Anderson, Lowell Levinger, Michael Kane) - 2:49
4. Interlude (Lowell Levinger) - 2:49
5. Double Interlude (Lowell Levinger, Joe Bauer, Steve Swallow) - 0:57
6. Sittin' Alone In The Moonlight (Bill Monroe) - 2:16
7. In Foggy Old London (Al Robinson) - 1:45
8. Before The Sun Goes Down (Jerry Organ, Vernon Claud) - 2:03
9. New Sail Away Ladies (Lowell Levinger) - 2:31
10.Ocean Of Diamonds (Cliff Carnahan) - 3:51
11.Familiar Patterns (Michael Kane) - 3:38
12.Great Blue Heron (Lowell Levinger) - 3:29
13.Honky Tonk Blues (Hank Williams) - 2:09
14.Lucas Valley Breakdown (Lowell Levinger) - 1:37